Skip to main content

tv   Red Eye  FOX News  August 17, 2013 12:00am-1:01am PDT

12:00 am
is called. >> cashing in, 11:30 tomorrow, red eye tomorrow at 11:00 p.m. >> i am on greta tonight! >> have a fantastic weekend, >> have a fantastic weekend, welcome to "red eye." it is the last othe moheccans if by moheccans you meanoh qualouds. up andy, what is coming up on tonight's show? >> who dances on qualouds? are professional athletes good role models? some say yes, but others say aaron hernandez. and a fraternity throws a blood versus crypts party. and finally are personal jet packs almost here? probably not, but we are doing this story anyway because wee th have been promising these things for 40 years and it is getting ridiculous.
12:01 am
>> thank you, andy. >> you bea. >> let's welcome our guest. she is so hot she needs a warning label and the warningwan label would read she's hot. i am hered, with brooke wi goldstein. she is the founder of something called the children's rights institute. project. and if hilarity was bongos i would bang him on the beach. and children are instructed not to feed him. it is my repulsive sidekick, bill schulz. and he is almost as athletic as i am. sitting next to me, the first time guest and former nfl and am list -- dash analyst -- almost said something else and co-host weekday mornings on wfan in new york city. >> a block. the lede. that's the first story. greg. as of today, i am serious. >> all right then. should our nation's brats look up to men with bats? a new poll has found that just
12:02 am
50% of american adults believe pro athletes are good role models for children. with a whooping 61% saying they shouldn't beheld in high regard and a 24% undecided, meanwhile last week yankee first base man mark tau share raw? >> toshara. >> thank you. what did he say? he said, quote a lot of people will say the percentage of professional athletes that get in trouble is not anymore or less than people in the general population. but the general population doesn't get to play at yankee stadium. i don't know if we have stats on that. we have to be great examples. what i kan do is not get -- what i can do is not get in trouble. children should look up to real heros like super dog.
12:03 am
how lovely until he dropped him. boomer, welcome to the show. >> i feel like i am in the wrong studio. >> you are, actually. this is not actually televised. this is actually therapy. we are all in a special group where we pretend to be on tv to get through our sexual addictions. >> nice. i would like to talk to you about that. >> well, thank you. >> not you. >> oh my. things are looking up, greg. >> he pointed at bill. >> i did not point at bill. don't you try to get me involved in this. >> don't i feel like the belle of the ball tonight. mom never said i would end up with the quarterback, greg and i win. >> it is usually a nickel bag. boomer, have athletes gotten worse or is it more media outlets to cover their miss deeds? >> i go back to when i played and there was no twitter and no social media. people didn't have cell phones where they could take pictures
12:04 am
and all of that other stuff, and we weren't really even that much out in the public. in our local cities we were, but now all of these stories are national stories and they are quick national stories. a guy like aaron hernandez will dominate the headlines. i am here to tell you that out of the oh maybe 1% or 2% of the bad apples in professional sports there are guys like dash sh ad that don't make the headlines because it is not sexy enough. who wants to know he is giving $1 million to harlem rbi and who wants to know a guy is going back to his hometown and building a field for excides? for kids? it doesn't make headlines. it is boring. and then you have the whole thing with the gang possibilities with aaron hernandez and all of the other stuff. that's why the stuff is making national headlines. i am here to tell you 99% of the guys that play on these sports are great guys and do a lot for their local communities. i know you don't want to to believe that and want to be cynical about it, but have at it. >> i do want to be cynical and i like the stories about
12:05 am
violent behavior because it is stuff we can talk about. when you said before there was social networks it was so much fun to be an athlete before because you could do whatever you wanted. >> it was great. you could do whatever you wanted. >> you could roll into town -- >> sometimes i am running around and jim kelly and dan marino and nobody cared who we were. >> no digital camera. >> look what happened to riley cooper, the guy that plays for the philadelphia eagles. he was at a kenny chesney concert and says a bad word, a stupid word especially if are you an athlete in that position and somebody has him on a video and they are going to post-it on vine. that's ridiculous. >> the worst offense was going to a kenny chesney concert. >> by the way, is there a more woosey place than to say the n-word than a kenny chesney concert? is there anyone to say that at at a kenny chesney concert? >> is he married? >> he was married to rebecca
12:06 am
-- >> renee zellweger. >> she filed fraud. there are rumors as to why she did that and i will let you google them. >> thank you. brooke, does bad behavior among athletes make them sexier to you? and how in anyway can you relate this to the muslim brotherhood? >> well, i am under strict instructions not to say anything about the muslim brotherhood. >> who told you to do that? our president obama who should be impeached? >> listen, we have done a lot of stories -- last night we did a story about a sports figure and it seems to be the outrage is always, well these are public figures. it is really important to know that the number one role model for children are their parents. the number one most important lesson is for pairns to teachers and their -- for parents to teachers and their children not to follow people just because they are famous. i think we have a problem in our society where all public figures by virtue of just being famous are an author tee or heroic and a role model.
12:07 am
you can see that with the actors. just because they are in a movie they should say anything about politics and be listened to. children need to discern between a role model, not all sports figures are role models, and a mere public figure. >> the problem is children are really stupid. >> no, they are impressionable. >> no, they are stupid. >> they are sponges. >> spupgs are dumb. sponges are dumb. >> they can be used like sponges. i use them when i am washing my car and go like this. jaime, if not athletes, then who should be role models? certainly not comedians like yourself. >> i think athletes should be role models, greg. if he was talking about a-rod which he was, i don't see how he is that bad of a role model. my kid does a couple of cycles of steroids and i get to live in a big house he bought me? >> here is a guy and his name is lebron james. do you know who he is? >> absolutely. >> maybe the most popular athlete in the world today, right?
12:08 am
he makes millions upon millions of dollars and goes back to his hometown in akron. he leaves cleveland and i understand why, right? he went to miami. he goes back every year and he helps those kids in his hometown. that never really gets written about and never really gets talked about. but there is a guy in that community, i think, kids look up to. he is trying to do the right thing. he is trying to make a difference. >> it is great because a lot of those kids don't play tennis. he has been so inspirational at wimbledon. >> okay. you know what i'm talking about especially in the communities where a father figure is hard to find. unfortunately i didn't have a mother growing up. she died when i was 7. but i had a father and he held me accountable and responsible. when i see that and feel that in my own life and like i try to do with my own kids, that worked. maybe that's why i am a success and why they will be a success. you can also understand why it is a detriment to these kids who don't have the father figure in their life.
12:09 am
they snow more about that than i do. >> that's a huge issue. there are so many single parent families out there. there is no community anymore because people just aren't hanging around. bill, your role model was fat willy, a homeless guy on the corner who sold discarded underwear. what has he taught you? >> he doesn't -- he isn't fat willy. he is morbid be obese willy. >> he likes tiny because it is ironic. million dollar idea, opening a bakery and make your baked goods look like lebron james, peyton manning what have you. call them roll models, if you will. million dollar idea. >> more of a single dollar idea. >> maybe what i would charge. it is not just the fact that we have the twitter and the on-line stuff and the 24-hour news cycle. it is the fact that the media has changed. i will give uh brief story. in the 1920 there's were
12:10 am
sports writers following the yankees and they were on the train because that's how we transported ourselves back then. it was not by the plane. they were in the train and a half naked lady comes rocketing through the train screaming. right behind her covering his junk, buck naked, babe ruth running right after her. everyone lifts up from the cars and goes through and they say did you see anything? no, i didn't see anything. did you see anything? no, i didn't see anything. they covered up for their athletes like they did the president so it changed across the board. >> did bill dream this? >> no, it was in a book. >> sometimes we had this experience where bill will tell a huge story and then afterwards he says i think i dreamt that and then we have to edit the whole thing out. >> that's a true story. there were stories about mickey man tell and the writers as well. there are all of these stories that come back from back in the day where they were protected. the athletes were protected, no question about it.
12:11 am
now it is a gotcha society. the quicker somebody can get somebody and get that up on youtube or get it up on vine or whatever it is, the more power to that person who is taking the other person down. basically that's what it is about right now. myself protected by remaining unknown. >> you are known. >> no, he's unknown, and he is doing a great job of it. kidding. jaime, everybody knows who you are here because we have your name on a list. from jocks to jerk jerk. was a fro fraternity bash -- they are in trouble after hosting a bloods and crypts party last month. the invitation said midnight, bloods and crypts party. i think i said that. choose wisely. the college's naacp chapter was chagrined that individuals mingled for hours dressed as bloods and crypts and using racial liesed language and then it turned into a ghetto party with racial liesed language and speech and dress.
12:12 am
they apologized and for now they realize it was insensitive and thoughtless to make light of a serious issue. also the conversation gave us a greater understanding of the pain gang violence causes and opened our eyes to a subject not fully comprehended. "red eye" tried to catch up with one of the brothers as he was leaving campus. >> looks like fun. >> we are laughing, but you know what, maybe he is getting great gas mileage. disart mut -- dartmouth frat boys are boys being boys, should we give them a pass? >> give them a pass. but they are crazy. that's why i decided not to get accepted. i went to one of these gang parties. i thought they were playing a joke on me. they said dude, dress up as a
12:13 am
cop which i did. i was trying to find the bathroom and no one would talk to me. it was like an unwritten rule. >> inning. >> you get no information. >> brooke, speaking of gangs, isn't the muslim brotherhood one and should obama be impeached? >> you know, i am confused. you will get slandered all over msnbc. you are a racist bigot for pointing out the fact that the muslim brotherhood is within the american government and we should all be worried about it. >> i knew i would get it out of her. >> i'm confused. what is this story about the naacp complaining because it is the blood and the crypts or then it went to a ghetto party and then the professor who wrote about it i think he retracted that it wasn't a ghetto party. you talk about this all the time. we live in an age of such hypersensitivity. where does it stop? can we not have a bros and hoes and not have ceo and secretary and not have a halloween where everybody dresses as the taliban?
12:14 am
where does it end? the naacp loses credibility, especially because they came out against the obama rodeo. it is offensive. the corner stone of a liberal democracy is a right to criticize government. that's an essential right, however you do it. it was not a racist thing to do and you are laughing. you know what i am saying is controversial. >> she is right. she is right. i just googled it. it is correct. >> i just dreamed it. >> boomer, are people more upset about a bloods and crypts themed party than they are about actual gang violence, people that would write about it? >> the guys throwing the party would be more is upett if the bloods and crypts actually showed up. that would not have gone over well. i asked my 22-year-old son who graduated from boston college. i said i am talking about this tonight, would this have ever happened, and if it did happen at boston college how would you have reacted if you got an invitation like this? he laughed and said this kid must be out of touch.
12:15 am
they must not be paying attention to what is going on out there in society. when you are doing something like this and inevitably it is going to get out there. somebody is going to google it or tweet it and you will create more problems than it is worth. so i actually would have said ceo's and secretaries would have been a better theme than this one. >> feminists would go crazy. >> what can you dress up as? >> muslim brotherhood. >> it doesn't bother me. i think we have to be able to laugh at ourselves and laugh at each other and sometimes people take things too seriously and not looking for the gotcha moment. >> the one thing i like about the gang party as opposed to the ceos and secretaries is so much easier for women to get ready. so i wear the blue shirt or the red shirt? i don't know, honey, do you want to get shot? >> bill, you started a fraternity, but that was with hobo carl and a squirrel named by they. >> are you not doing your
12:16 am
research. does he bitey after a few drinkies? maybe. this goes back to the fact whether you are in an ivy league or devry. if either of of those two colleges, if you are in a fraternity in either of those things you won't do something smart. the group thing i don't care how highbrow the institution is the end result is stupid. >> same thing with the locker room. in the football locker room it is aggressive guys. they are told to go out on sun ad i and beat the hell out of each other. you wonder why every now and then one of these guys goes astray. it is an incubator for that. >> and the worst thing is when those football players catch me in the locker room. that does not go well for yours truly. >> you often disguise yourself as a towel. >> no, what i do when i see them is throw my camera at them and then when they are distracted i run.
12:17 am
>> brooke, were you in a sorority? >> no, i went to a canadian university. >> oh, but canadians are incredibly intolerant of anything like this, right? they would go like, you can't throw these parties. >> sure you can. sure you can. >> don't they beat the human -- >> they repealed it, 6 and 13. the canadian human rights act was repealed and now you can be offensive to people. >> have you seen her drink? i mean, yeah. >> i think in canada the bloods and crypts are buddies. >> really? they are that nice? honestly, what kind of parties can you have? what can you have? you can't have any. >> my daughter just had a party and she themed it. it was like the roaring 20s. >> those are big. >> but that is about breaking the law and being a bootlegger and breaking the law. that is offensive. >> you can look at it like that. >> the fact that women couldn't vote, could they? >> well, they could.
12:18 am
for the purposes of our roaring 20s parties they can't vote, but they can't talk or parallel park. >> how about a p.e.d. party? >> definitely no fights there. >> and you would be -- you would have to apologize for facilitating the use of an illegal drug, right? >> let me ask you a question, at the end of the day who are you apologizing to? does it matter who you are apologizing to? >> the phony outraged. >> the naacp was complaining, but it is sort of -- it doesn't make sense to me. they are saying a blood and crypts party insults african-americans, but that's only if you think -- >> they are all going to be in a gang. that's just as -- >> everyone knows they are all albanians. i know we will get letters, greg, but somebody had to say. it the albanians are out of control. >> coming up, our children, our future. brooke goldstein discusses her
12:19 am
new book, "yes, but only the attractive ones" you are so vein, brooke. are we on track to own a jet pack? it rhymes so it must be true. at farmers we make you smarter about insurance,
12:20 am
12:21 am
because what you dont know can hurt you. what if you didn't know that it's smart to replace washing-machine hoses every five years?
12:22 am
what if you didn't know that you might need extra coverage for more expensive items? and what if you didn't know that teen drivers are four times more likely to get into an accident? 'sup the more you know, the better you can plan for what's ahead. talk to farmers and get smarter about your insurance. ♪ we are farmers bum - pa - dum, bum - bum - bum -bum ♪ a federal judge ruled the police stops in new york city violated new york's constitutional rights. the city officials said allowing cops to detain any person cops think is suspicious is crucial to cutting crime and mayor bloomburg blasted the ruling saying there is no question that the policy has saved countless lives. the judge said the problem is with implementation and it became a policy of indirect racial profiling because if officers stopped blacks and hispanics they would not have been stopped if they were white.
12:23 am
the city's police commissioner agrees. >> we do not engage in racial profiling. it is provided by law. it is provided by our own regulations. >> once again i do not know what agrees means. ?i way, here is a case -- anyway, shear a case for staying out of somebody's space. >> bless you. >> i wanted it to happen again. deserved it. that could have bitten her head off. boomer? >> what. >> did the judge ignore the real world? >> i am not a constitutional lawyer so i am just giving my personal feelings about what i think here. i say you have to go to the victims' families that have lost kids shot by stray bullets and ask those moms how
12:24 am
they feel about the safety in those neighborhoods. just ask them and they will tell you. we never seem to hear from those people. those people put the silent pressure on the police department that has a much bigger presence in those particular neighborhoods. i will say are you for the nsa looking into your e-mails and phone records? if you are for that, you have to be for this. you can't be for that and not for this. >> amen. >> it has to be one or the other. it is the same thing. it is a personal -- a front that somebody who is not carrying a gun walking down the street and then all of a sudden somebody says, we are going stop and frisk you. we have to do this. this is our policy and howdy meaning that must be -- how demeaning it must be for the person. the other thing is don't do it. see if it turns into chicago. >> thases -- that's a scary thing. they do a controlled trial of a drug and a drug is not working at all, so they just stop it. they only do it for a year and then in three months everyone is dying from it. i think we should stop it.
12:25 am
that's what happened. i agree with you. stop and frisk is nsa on foot. that's what it is. the fact is it works. i am tired of people saying that they are against the nsa and for this. it seems to be telling me something about who they are okay with searching. >> how do we know it works? climate has been going down. it has been plummeting across the board and not just in this country. it did in this city before we did stop and frisk. there is a correlation there. >> i don't believe it has. >> i believe it has. >> i don't believe you. this is a man who stopped and frisked his center at the beginning of every play. did you ever find a weapon? answer the question. did you ever find a weapon? >> i am not going to answer that. they get mad at me and i say no, they didn't have a weapon. >> here is the thing about all of this. in m estimation it is logical. if the crime has gone down and the killings have gone down and you are the mayor of this city $8 million people give or
12:26 am
take a hundred thousand and you are trying to grasp uh hold of the illegal element in the city, how else do you do it? what are the alternatives? what is the alternatives? >> nobody has an alternative. >> it is not black and white. >> it is muslim brotherhood. >> quickly, i'm sorry. >> there is a couple points here and you said you are not a constitutional, but you brought up something everybody has been missing. the nsa, the government excused it by saying we are just seizing and not searching. that's exactly what is prohibited by the constitution. it doesn't matter if they look into our phone calls and the contents. they are seizing it and doing it without a warrant. again it is not black and white. the constitution is very clear. the controlling supreme court case is very clear. you have to have a reasonable suspicion that a crime -- stop and frisk.
12:27 am
i am not against if there is a reasonable suspicion if somebody has engaged in a crime. that's been the rule since 1968. >> i knew all of these rules, but i'm glad you pointed them out for me. i wanted to get jaime into this. you have been studying law since you were incarcerated. >> i know a lot about it. >> and yet we went to you last. >> and almost not at all. i am for stop and frisk. i also wish we could talk to the homeless people. i get scared. i don't care -- i realize i am not who is being targeted here and who is upset, but i am for anything that makes us safer. you know how they say if you see something suspicious -- i am that guy that calls. i said i think something is going on. i see bill with a woman. >> even boomer goes, oh wow. >> so interested in the conversation. i am glad you got them in there.
12:28 am
>> that's true. >> you know, but, bill, you were really against the mayor's stop and poop legislation because that was preventing you from defecating on the streets and wandering around aimlessly. >> if not on the streets, on the patio? that was my answer. on greg's patio. >> thank you for showing me the light. all right, coming up, the euro zone's return to slow growth will encourage politicians to blame the blocked crisis is ending. but it is too slugish to overcome deep problems. we are not doing that story. instead, why was this internet famous raccoon by the state. the story the lame stream media does not want you to media does not want you to hear. the kyocera torque lets you hear and be heard even in stupid loud places. to prove it, we set up our call center right here...
12:29 am
[ chirp ] all good? [ chirp ] getty up. call me. seriously, this is really happening! [ cellphone rings ] hello? it's a giant helicopter ma'am. [ male announcer ] get it done [ chirp ] with the ultra-rugged kyocera torque, only from sprint direct connect. trble hearing on the phone? buy one get four free for your business. visit spntcaptel.com
12:30 am
12:31 am
12:32 am
recall? san diego mayor bob filner, there is that handsome devil, is challenging an effort to bounce him from office by touting his accomplishments and ignoring the accusations. yep, in his response obtained by the aep, the associated press, brooke, filner doesn't mention the reason for the recall attempt and instead talks about progress and the progress the city has made under him. he writes, quote, as your mayor, i am committed to moving san diego forward.
12:33 am
yeah, into your pants. meanwhile, a hooters in san diego has posted a sign saying they will not serve filner adding, quote, women should be treated with respect. thank you, hooters. anyway, you know who else is just barely hanging on? >> oh that was beautiful. jaime said that looked like they were filming a poster for mondays. >> actually it looked like you two guys. >> that was just unnecessary. and it was hurtful. >> i am just warming up. >> let me go to you, boomer. >> again? why because i have a vip card to hooters?
12:34 am
filner has no idea what he is missing out on. >> if you lose hooters -- >> you lose everything. it is an american staple and something we created and we own it. i think all politicians should be allowed to go there. if you are a politician you should be allowed to go to hooters, but i can understand why they are doing what they are doing. it is a shame. by the way, my picture hangs on a wall in a hooters in tampa. it is interesting. somebody tweeted the picture to me last week and i tweeted it to my followers and they said the women in the picture with me one looked like tonya harding. that's how bad it was. that was back in the 1980s. they had the frizzy hair. >> that was a bad time for hair for women. brooke, they probably don't have hootersers ers in radical islam countries. >> you know who would be offended by hooters? the muslim brotherhood. >> she even looked into the camera. >> you need your own special on fox news. i can see it in about three
12:35 am
months. >> what were we talking about? >> let's talk about filner. >> obviously they thought he was a liability. i mean if he can't control himself in his office where people are fully dressed and he is presumably sober how will he control himself when he is drinking. >> it is like a kid in a candy store. >> you are saying he is a politician and he has a right to go to hooters. but if he is a politician and he is being sued for sexual harassment you would think he would voluntarily ban himself from hooters. >> remember he checked himself out early from sexual harassment training and apparently he is really good at it. he got out early. what do you make of this, jaime. you are a lonely man. >> and they are replacing the phrase kid in a candy store with hooters. this guy is a more ron. moron. going back on the story i had no idea -- did you read the part where he had sexual advances at a conference?
12:36 am
what would he say show us on the doll and i am the doll? >> don't laugh at that. >> i was laughing at something brooke whispered to me. it was very pro muslim brotherhood that surprised me. >> he is not much different than michael bloomburg. this is his former stop and frisk. >> bill, hooters has also asked you to stay out. not because you are a harasser because they want you out of everyone's lives. >> they won't hire me which is sexist. they are dumb. they are dumb, dumb, um did. if they really want to help their city, the city of san diego, what they don't say is filner is banned from hooters, period. filner is banned from hooters until he resigns and then he can have all of the boobs and wings he wants. take one for the team. use that as a bait and get him to come to hooters. >> this guy has got to resign. i can't understand what is he thinking? he has to resign.
12:37 am
he is a despicable human being, isn't he, brooke? >> are you judging him before he has been found guilty by a court of law? >> how many people have come out? 13 women now? this stuff isn't pretty. this guy is pretty bad. >> but also there is a movement now to get every single establishment to ban him, all restaurants. >> that's fun. >> that's overkill. thews -- that's overkill. let the law judge him guilty of a crime and run its course. >> what's with you and the law? >> we have to take a break. time to move on, but more is on the way including a special segment with boomer where i ask him questions about sports. you know i am an expert on sporting things and the like. joy of hate, amazon.com ever written by me in the past year. autographed copy g gutfeld.com. dad. how did you get here?
12:38 am
i don't know. [ speaking in russian ] look, look, look... you probably want to get away as much as we do. with priceline express deals, you can get a fabulous hotel without bidding. think of the rubles you'll save. with one touch, fun in the sun.
12:39 am
i like fun. well, that went exactly i as planned.. really?
12:40 am
12:41 am
book. and what a week in sports we have had. redskins quarterback robert griffin iii or to coin a nickname, rg iii told gq magazine he thinks the window is now for gay players to come out. and chipper jones bucked the trend of athletes on twitter by ditching the site because of too much hate. like i said, what a week in sports. so let's discuss all of that with those who have thrown 247 more touchdowns than me. not a wide margin, but a margin nonetheless. i was a 49er fan and i grew up in the bay area. i don't want to bring things up, but have you han interesting -- you have an interesting story about when you lost. >> i told the story many times, but you were not paying
12:42 am
attention. you are suppose supposed to say i am going to disney world. we kick off and they get the ball and joe montana says -- saw john candy and he says, guys, look at this, john candy. and it cut all of the intensity of the moment and marched them down the field. as he marches them down the field i get a tap on my souledder and -- my shoulder and they said they look like you. they have black glasses and cameramen and they had a make up person and the writer of the lines. the lines were i'm going to disney world. they wanted to make sure i knew my lines. i am practicing the lines and i have the camera people surrounding me. much like you not knowing what football is about and the intensity of the sport and the moment at that particular time, they are asking me. i am going to disney world, i am going to disney world. 30 seconds into the game and hits john taylor for the game winning touchdown. before i could get the words out of my mouth i am not going
12:43 am
to disney world they were running across the field looking for jerry rice because he was the mvp of the super bowl. talk about insult to injury. >> did you ever go to disney world after that? >> yes. i didn't have kids at the time. in the early 90s i made up with disney and got a job at monday night football. here is a trivia question. who did i get fired for? who replaced me on monday night football? >> dennis miller? >> yes. >> i know sports! i pretend not to know sports. >> you know dennis miller because you worked with him. you don't know anything about forts "the 5" is going to your head. >> that's a great guess. >> off the wall question, bill hemmer, sports anker in cinncinati. any hemmer stories? >> he was really nonde script, very low key and straightlaced and all of that. we had jerry springer and he was more of the story.
12:44 am
we had characters on our team. we had a character who was a gazillionare doing what he does now and cinncinati is a unique place. >> that is true. speaking of straight, griffin's comments, is the nfl ready for an openly gay player? do you actually believe there are a lot of gay players? >> i wouldn't say a lot, but i'm sure there are some. i do agree with robert griffin the third that now is the time. but we have something in common that neither of us are gay. we don't have the understanding of being the gay player and coming out against everything in his mind. how will people respond to me. he probably has his own worse feelings in his heart saying i don't want to come out because i don't want to deal with this. i don't want to deal with the repercussions from the ownership. it is all lip service. the bottom line is i don't think teams want distractions. that's the big word in the nfl. no distractions. initially that will be a major distraction if a player has the guts to come out and say
12:45 am
he is gay. >> i want to ask you about the 1980s. was that the wild west when it came to steroids? >> it was wild west and cocaine and they had a baseball team and dwight goodin and dwight is trying to get his life back in order and it is a fight every day. they had a crazy group of guys. he looked like a little league player and then went to philadelphia and my radio partner in the morning said when he was in philadelphia he said oh special vitamin, special vitamin. there was a real push toward the steroids in the 80s coupled with cocaine that was the drug of choice at the time. and players weren't as out there as they are today. today's player dashes dash there are players that do it, bought not the amount in numbers. >> if i had steroids and cocaine i could sit through a mets game. >> actually if you had cocaine i don't know if you would.
12:46 am
baseball games are not good for cocaine. >> i understand why player does it though. all you have to do is look at a-rod. he signed a $250 million contract for texas and came to new york and opted out of his contract and got a new $275 million contract. if you are looking up to a-rod as the player in baseball and that's who you want to be and make the money and coming from the dregs of latin america, the really poor communities and this is your way out -- >> it is gambling. even if you get busted you came outweigh ahead. you risk the shame for a couple hundred million dollars. >> a lot of these guys -- we are not talking about mensa members. they are going out there to use their body to make as much as they possibly can. they say if he can do it -- but there is a money angle to. the reason i believe major league baseball is so hard on these guys is because the more numbers they create the higher contracts go. if they can suppress the numbers the contracts are not
12:47 am
going to go as high. don't think for one moment there is not that part of the equation associated with this. >> interesting point. we have to go. remember to check out boomer's foundation. it is esiason.org. >> no dash? winky face? i am stupid. i am a member of mensa by the way. the post game report from tv's the post game report from tv's andy levy. huh...fifteen minutes the post game report from tv's andy levy. could save you fifteen percent or more on car insurance. yep, everybody knows that. well, did you know the ancient pyramids were actually a mistake? uh-oh. geico. fifteen minutes could save you...well, you know.
12:48 am
12:49 am
if you're like me, you've been working you've been working like a dog all year. but you don't need to camp out 'til labor day to reward yourself! mattress discounters' labor day sale is on now! rest those tired bones on a queen size sealy gel memory foam mattress for just $497! get 48 months interest-free financing on the entire tempur-pedic cloud collection. but this sale won't last long! ♪ mattress discounters!
12:50 am
12:51 am
for the post game report. hi, andy. >> hi, greg. are athletes good role models? boomer, you said there was no social media and no twitter, and nobody wants to hear how mark texiera gives to an inner city. i didn't have a strong feeling one way or the other, but he seems like a great guy. >> she a great guy and an example of what every athlete should be like. he makes a lot of money and puts it back into the community he lives. >> i think we should hear more. >> brooke, you .ed out -- you pointed out how children need to discern between --
12:52 am
>> i meant parents have to teachers and their children how to learn and discern. it is an important lesson. >> absolutely. and that's the thing. i think athletes can be role models. boomer pointed owl lebron james. look at jackie robinson. there is a reason breaking the color barrier was so important. rightly or wrongly people look to athletes in sports to set trends in society. >> yes, but there will always be the bad apples. not every athlete and not every public figure has to be put up as a role modelment we shouldn't throw our hands up and say they are role models and how did we do that? >> i agree. >> discerning is important. >> thought i would wrap that up there. >> dartmouth fraternity has bloods versus crypts. you said this is a blood versus crypts party and it was confusing? >> i was confused what they were. >> can it be both?
12:53 am
>> they didn't say it was a ghetto party, but they were accused of having a ghetto party because it was a bloods and crypts party. >> they said -- the party started out as a bloods versus crypts party and then apparently devolved and evolved into a ghetto party. >> what is that? >> it is a bunch of white dudes in an ivy league school acting like they are from the ghetto. >> that's what white dudes do when they want to be cool, isn't it? >> i guess. also the dartmouth professor who tweeted about it, he was pointing out that the students defended it by saying it wasn't a ghetto party. it wasn't a bloods and crypts party. >> what kind of party can you have now? >> yes, what kind of party can you have? i say in an outraged voice. >> i am sick of phony outrage too, but i am tired of phony outrageousness too. let's pretend to be gangsters.
12:54 am
that will really show our parents. >> i agree. it is silly. but college kids, they own silly. >> that's true. >> join the military i say. >> just like you? >> yep. well mine wasn't really the military. it was more like a club. >> you do have barics. >> i do have barics and i do have a iewn form. >> not much of one. >> what is shorts and a tank top? >> i just googled the difference between the bloods and crypts party and a ghetto party and it does it doesn't matter. >> that's pretty accurate. >> judge ruled new york city stop and frisk right to minority. just to be clear, the judge -- and to other people, the judge didn't say the nypd has to stop and frisk. they just have to be done differently. >> basically what is happening here is they are taking it -- the other side is taking it to the enth degree and making it more than what the judge said. i think what is happening in new york is we are so racially
12:55 am
charged right now and because we are in the midst of a mayoral election, this thing gets blown completely out of proportion and mayor bloomburg has to deal with it and clean it up. >> the vast majority of the stops and frisks were targeted at hispanics and african-americans. it does sound like profiling. >> to the judge it does. >> it is like 85%. >> i imagine it has to do with where these police are in the neighborhoods they are patrolling and remember one of the reasons they are in those neighborhoods is because the people who lived there want them there. >> yeah, andy you race hater. >> yeah, i am a race hater. the problem is branding. stop and frisk sounds invasive. changing it to stop n frisk. >> is sounds like a snack. >> it is the stop n frisk guys. that sounds friendly. >> what if there was a way to make it a more positive for the person. the bad news is i frisked you and profiled you.
12:56 am
the good news is you do not have tess particular -- testicular cancer. i checked. >> is he always in character? >> i will tell you something, he is a character, but we love him. >> on filner, brooke, can they legally ban one person? >> sure. it is a private enterprise. as long as they are not discriminating on race, ethnicity, national origin. >> you can discriminate against a jerk. >> guys, i got kicked out of hooters once. i brought good food in there once. they said get out of here with that good food. it doesn't belong. >> before we leave, i have my fantasy draft coming up soon. who is a better pick, mark sanchez or this napkin with scribble on it? >> i see the dig of sanchez. you must be a jet fan because most jet fans see it that way. >> i am a giants fan. >> just worry about ely manning and don't worry about
12:57 am
the jets. >> i was a fan when you were on the team. >> we weren't much better either. >> we have to roll. thanks, andy. brooke, schulz, jaime, boomer. that does it for me. come back, boomer. come back, boomer. >> sounds good. the kyocera torque lets you hear and be heard even in stupid loud places. to prove it, we set up our call center right here... [ chirp ] all good? [ chirp ] getty up. call me. seriously, this is really happening! [ cellphone rings ] hello? it's a giant helicopter ma'am. [ male announcer ] get it done [ chirp ] with the ultra-rugged kyocera torque, only from sprint direct connect. trble hearing on the phone? buy one get four free for your business. visit spntcaptel.com from capital one... boris earns unlimited rewards for his small business. can i get the smith contract, ease? thank you. that's three new paper shredders. [ boris ] put 'em on my spark card. [ garth ] boris' small business earns 2% cash back on every pchase every day. great businesses deserve unlimited rewards.
12:58 am
read back the chicken's testimony, please. "buk, buk, bukka!" [ male announcer ] get the spark business card from capital one and earn unlimited rewards. choose 2% cash back or double miles on every purchase every day. told you i'd get half. what's in your walle
12:59 am
1:00 am
♪ >> laura: the o'reilly factor is on. tonight: >> to me it's ridiculous to look at that case and not think that race was involved. >> laura: oprah winfrey weighs in on the george zimmerman verdict. wait until you hear what she has to say about the n word. will her words help heal or add to the racial division in america? >> america is not interested in spying on ordinary people. >> also, did the president mislead the american people on the nsa scandal? the spy agency now commits it broke privacy rules thousands of times a year. have they been spying on you? he we will have a factor investigation. >> the first thing that happened to me at the hotel is i got escorted

133 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on